1 spool of 30 gauge aluminum wire from Radioshack, comes in red,
blue and white in 50ft. Do not get the magnet wire that is copper. The copper
is very stiff while wrapping also the enamel insulator easily scrapes off
causing minute shortages.

1 crystal.

First select a length of wire that will be appropriate for the
size of crystal. Very small crystals will need only three feet of wire, larger
ones with a diameter of 1 inch or larger will need 20-25 feet or more, the hole
spool for giant crystals.

Fold the wire in half, then fold that in half again. Basically
folding the wire into quarters.

Now take the end where both ends are bent, place them into the
locking chuck of your cordless drill. The easiest way to keep them together
evenly in the drill is by starting a small twist to hold them together.

Set the drill direction so that it will remove a screw.(lefty
loosie) With your other hand, hold onto the end with the two leads. Make sure
you keep good tension while the drill is rotating. This will minimize
irregularities. If the wire is longer than your arm span have someone help hold
it or clamp it to a sturdy stand.

You'll know the wire is correctly wound when the thread angles
are at 45 degrees.

Hold your crystal and wire like so. You will be doing a counter
clock wire wrap that works upward.

Here is how you start your first knot.

Notice that the knot goes over, down, up-around. It's basically
a square knot. Keep this knot a little loose because you'll need the space for
the remaining knots.

Now repeat the process. You'll notice the wire working upward.
While the knot keeps getting larger. Start pulling the wire tight.

Here is how it looks going around a third time. Each time you
start a new knot you start just before the last one. Remember to keep the wraps
tight. This will ensure you don't have any wires overlapping on the back.

Here is the finished result. You'll notice that the knot's start
right after the last one begun. Use glue to hold wires in place, a hot glue gun
or goop works great. Strip the ends and you got your self an SP! 8-)

If you notice the knots getting to difficult to overlap then
start another row the same way as the first. Pull the excess just a little
above the first mobius wrap, wrap the wire around CCW then do the knot and keep
repeating as many times as needed. It's basically a simple pattern that keeps
repeating. The reason for twisting the wire lefty-loosie and CCW around the crystal is because you want the end result. It's not the motion of your hands wrapping that creates a clockwise wrap, it's the final result of when you follow the wire ends. When you look down from either end you'll see the wire travels in a clockwise motion. When the energy travels thru the wire it is always moving in a clockwise motion. Here is a basic tutorial showing how the clockwise coil wrap travels. http://www.ryanmcginty.com/orgone/cwwraptutorial.htm